The event's theme is "Heavenly Bodies."

It's probably safe to assume that Rihanna throws incredible parties. And in just a few short months, we'll get to see her in action, when she hosts the 2018 Met Gala alongside Amal Clooney and Donatella Versace, according to Vogue.

The magazine — whose editor-in-chief, Anna Wintour, has chaired the Met Ball since 1995 — noted that the three guests of next year's event have attended a combined 24 Met Galas. Rihanna has attended the event seven times, performed twice, and, earlier this year, she was praised for being one of only a handful of attendees who truly embraced the 2017 gala's theme, "Rei Kawakubo/Comme des Garçons: Art of the In-Between." For the event, she wore a sculptural Comme des Garçons gown covered in fabric "petals." Amal has only attended one Met Ball, 2015's "China: Through the Looking Glass" exhibition, but it was one to remember: She wore a scarlet Maison Margiela Artisanal gown with a fitted bodice and narrow A-line skirt made of layers and layers of ruffled fabric. Donatella has attended a whopping 16 Met Galas since 1995, always in one of her ultra-luxe, form-fitting designs.

Last year's hosts were Katy Perry, Pharrell Williams, Gisele Bündchen, and Tom Brady. In the years before that, celebs from all across the entertainment and fashion spectrum, including Taylor Swift, Marc Jacobs, and Jennifer Lawrence, have joined Wintour in cohosting the glamorous event.

Vogue also revealed that the theme for next year's event will be "Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination." The exhibit, which aims to "create a dialogue between fashion and the masterworks of religious art" in the Costume Institute's archives, is co-sponsored by Donatella and will juxtapose actual religious pieces — like the papal robes on loan from the Sistine Chapel, many of which have never left the Vatican — with modern-day items by Coco Chanel, John Galliano, and more, that were inspired by Catholic ornamentation and symbolism.

The 2018 Met Gala will take place at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City on April 30. The "Heavenly Bodies" exhibit will be open to the public at the Met, the Anna Wintour Costume Center, and the Met's uptown branch, The Cloisters, from May 10 through October 8.